Center for Empirical Studies of Intellectual Property

Chicago-Kent's Center for Empirical Studies of Intellectual Property, the first academic center of its kind in the nation, promotes the application of empirical social science methods, both quantitative and qualitative, to studying important questions about innovation, creativity, and other issues related to intellectual property law.

Intellectual property (IP) law is based on many assumptions about how creators and innovators behave, how markets for inventions operate, and how judges and juries adjudicate IP disputes. Despite the prominence of these assumptions in IP doctrine, their accuracy has rarely been tested. Empirical studies—employing controlled experiments, data collection from real-world cases, and structured interviews—can examine the validity of IP law's basic assumptions and provide recommendations for promoting innovation and increasing the efficiency of the system.

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The Center's Goals

The Center will promote the use of empirical methods to study IP in a number of ways. Empirical research can be expensive, and the Center will provide funding to support empirical research on IP and innovation. In addition, the Center will host regular conferences where researchers, attorneys and judges can discuss research questions and methods. Finally, the Center plans to support faculty fellows and law students interested in doing empirical research on IP.